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    THE SHIELD

    Now that all the living hostages are home,
    we are learning more and more about their
    amazing inner strength, and their powerful
    spirit.
    My zeide, HaRav Avraham Jungreis zt”l,
    used to say that the term ‘Holocaust survivor’
    is a misnomer… Today, I hear his words
    echo as I listen to the stories of the hostages
    of October 7. He would say that those who
    made it through the horrors of the Holocaust,
    the atrocities of the concentration camps, are
    fighters, not survivors. And so it is with the
    hostages. They are all fighters, with emuna
    and bitachon as their ammunition.
    I saw a clip from an Israeli human-interest
    show, “Pulse of Israel”. The broadcaster
    spoke of the “trend hachi cham”, the hottest
    trend among secular Israeli teens… it was
    Shabbos. Who would believe. It was
    attributed to the heightened sense of
    spirituality since October 7. A spirituality
    inspired by the former hostages, and their
    faith in HaShem. A faith that kept them
    going in the tunnels of Gaza.
    Allow me to share some of the inspiring

    words from several hostages.
    “There is a song based on the words of Rabbi
    Nachman of Breslov. ‘Even in the darkest
    places, when you don’t feel G-d, when it
    seems He is hiding, He is still there with
    you.’ I would sing this song over and over to
    myself. It gave me strength.”—Bar
    Kuperstein.
    Bar, a combat medic, was off-duty while at
    the Nova festival. He stayed behind to aid
    the wounded, and was taken hostage. He was
    subjected to beatings and starvation.
    “In the darkness of Gaza, I found the greatest
    light. Every night I spoke to G-d. Not to ask
    for things, but to say ‘Abba, how are You?
    Thank you for everything You have given
    me.’ If there is anything I miss from captivity,
    it’s how close I felt to Him.” – Omar Shem
    Tov
    Omar was abducted from Nova and spent
    most of his captivity shackled in the tunnels.
    He speaks publicly about his increased faith,
    and his fight for survival.
    “All week we set aside a piece of our daily
    pita for Shabbat. On Friday night, I recited
    Aishet Chayil, thinking of my wife and
    family. I made kiddush on water and

    hamotzie on pita. – Eli Sharabi
    Eli was abducted from his home in
    Kibbutz Be’eri.
    He was subjected to physical and
    psychological torture. Upon his
    release, Eli learned that his wife,
    Lianne, and two daughters, Noya
    and Yael, were murdered by Hamas.
    His brother, Yossi, was kidnapped
    alive and killed in captivity.
    “On Shabbat, we made Friday night
    Kiddush and shook the tunnels.” –
    Segev Kalafon
    Segev was taken while fleeing Nova. During
    his captivity, his parents focused on mitzvos
    and davening, as a z’chus to bring him home.
    Segev suffered from PTSD and asthma prior
    to his abduction, making his captivity even
    more difficult.
    “Every morning, I would stand in the corner
    and imagine putting on tefillin. I would go
    through the entire process, step-by-step, in
    my head.” – Elya Cohen
    Elya hid with others in a bomb shelter at
    Nova. Hamas terrorists threw grenades into
    it. It became known as the “Death Bunker”.
    Elya hid under dead bodies, but was found
    and taken hostage.
    “I learned, as my ancestors did, that my
    faith and covenant with G-d are more
    powerful than any captor. Hamas tried to
    coerce me into converting to Islam, even
    forcing a hijab on my head, but they
    couldn’t take my soul.” – Agam Berger
    Agam was abducted after working only
    one day at an IDF lookout tower. When she
    was finally safe in Israel hands, she wrote a
    sign for all to see, paraphrasing Dovid
    HaMelech’s words in Tehillim: “B’derech
    emuna bocharti, I chose a path of faith,
    U’vederech emuna chozarti, And I returned
    through a path of faith.”
    “The only thing that gave me strength was
    knowing that everything done was simply
    because I was a Jew. It made me realize
    that we are truly different. We must return
    to being a united people, to keeping
    mitzvos, to understanding what it means to
    be Jewish.” – Rom Braslovski
    Rom was a security guard at Nova. He
    tended to the wounded, and then was
    captured by Hamas.
    Each of the hostages has their story. Each
    of them have their words of faith and
    inspiration. From where did they get the
    strength to rise above the physical pain and
    mental anguish…
    Reading the words of these modern heroes,
    I’m reminded of the very first Jew who
    faced the unknown with faith – Avraham
    Avinu. Pirkei Avos tells us that Avraham

    Avinu was tested with ten life challenges.
    (Avos 5:4) The first, as well as several others,
    can be found in this week’s parsha, Lech
    Lecha. HaShem instructs Avraham to leave
    his land, his culture, his birthplace, even his
    father’s house and his family. To leave it all
    behind. To go “El ha’aretz asher ar’echa, To
    the land that I will show you.” The unknown.
    Avraham and Sora picked themselves up and
    left behind everything familiar. The life they
    knew for so long. They trekked to Canaan.
    But that wasn’t the end of the tests. In
    Canaan, they faced famine and had to once
    again pick themselves up and head to
    Mitzrayim. There, Sora was abducted by
    Pharaoh. The tests continued – one after
    another. Years of childlessness. Avraham
    giving himself a bris at age 99. Dealing with
    Yishmael. And then, the final test. The
    Akeida.
    Both Avraham’s leaving his homeland and
    the final test of the Akeida, were given with
    instructions of “lech lecha”. A message to
    Avraham… a life lesson to us. At times, we
    have to “pick ourselves up”, to motivate
    ourselves, to take action in order to
    accomplish.
    Each day, as we say the Shemoneh Esrei, we
    open with mentioning the Avos, the G-d of
    Avraham, the G-d of Yitzchok, the G-d of
    Yaakov. But we close the bracha with the
    words magen Avraham, the shield of
    Avraham. The Chidushei HaRim teaches
    that within every neshama there is a spark. A
    spirit that is able to withstand life’s tests and
    trials. The magen, the shield of Avraham, is
    that spark. A spiritual gene that is passed
    down from generation to generation. Each of
    us is a carrier of that gene. The spark to
    withstand, the ability to rise above whatever
    challenges come our way. A spark that will
    never be extinguished, but will always be
    with Klal Yisroel.
    That is the magen Avraham that protects us.
    That is what protected the hostages in the
    tunnels of Gaza. It is the spark that burns
    within every Jew, the light that no darkness
    can extinguish. That is the shield that helped
    the hostages keep the sparks of light burning
    even in the dark tunnels of Gaza.